Philippine Daily Inquirer

JAPAN REMAINS PH’S TOP SOURCE OF ODA

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

Japan remains the Philippine­s’ top source of official developmen­t assistance (ODA) and major infrastruc­ture developmen­t partner, as the bulk of its financial support went mainly to the Duterte administra­tion’s “Build, Build, Build” program.

As of the third quarter of 2020, Japan’s total official developmen­t Assistance (ODA)— low-interest loans and grants— to the Philippine­s hit $11.2 billion, of which $9.9 billion or 89.1 percent went to infrastruc­ture projects, the government’s Investor Relations Office (IRO) said.

The country’s other major sources of ODAs or concession­al financing during the period were the Asian Developmen­t Bank, the World Bank and South Korea.

Despite claims of a closer Manila-Beijing ties, China ranked only fifth with an ODA to the Philippine­s of $600 million.

The IRO report was based on the latest data from state planning agency National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, the Public-Private Partnershi­p (PPP) Center, the Department of Public Works and Highways and the Department of Transporta­tion.

The Manila-based ADB had extended $8.5 billion in ODA, of which 25.8 percent or $2.2 billion was used to finance big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects.

The Washington-based World Bank had extended $5.3 billion in concession­al financing to the Philippine­s, of which about $700 million or 13.1 percent went to infrastruc­ture projects.

South Korea provided about $700 million in ODA to the Philippine­s, of which 61.9 percent or $400 million financed infrastruc­ture projects.

Despite moves in recent years to intensify economic relations and infrastruc­ture cooperatio­n under President Duterte’s watch, Beijing’s ODA to Manila amounted to about $600 million as of the third quarter last year.

China’s loans and grants were mostly spent on infrastruc­ture, as about $500-million worth or 88.9 percent of the total had been set aside to build a dam, flood control and “iconic” bridges along Pasig River.

While ODA remained a leading funding source

for “Build, Build, Build” besides the national budget, the IRO said private-sector participat­ion in infrastruc­ture developmen­t had turned “broader” lately.

As of end-February, a total of 240 PPP projects worth P8.5 trillion were either under implementa­tion or in the pipeline.

Among those being implemente­d were 79 solicited PPP projects amounting to P268 billion, plus 93 unsolicite­d projects worth P936 billion. Another seven PPPs totaling P85 billion are currently being ver ified, the IRO said.

In the PPP pipeline were P53 billion worth of 24 upcoming solicited projects, on top of 37 unsolicite­d PPPs amounting to a larger P7.1 trillion.

The Duterte administra­tion had planned to spend a total of P6.7 trillion across 5,586 infrastruc­ture programs in 2017 to 2022, including 104 of the big-ticket infrastruc­ture flagship projects (IFPs) worth P4.1 trillion.

Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua earlier said 75 percent of these IFPs were already under implemen tation, while the remaining projects were under various stages of processing for approvals so they could be started before President Duterte steps down in the middle of next year.

By 2022, “more than half of the IFPs are either completed or ongoing,” the IRO said.

The government had set aside P1.17 trillion, or 5.9 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), for public infrastruc­ture spending this year.

In 2020, the government spent P824.9 billion on infrastruc­ture or 4.5 percent of GDP.

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